Police are investigating a murder-suicide that left two men dead at a home Sunday night.

Officers were called to the home on Winding Way about 10 p.m. to investigate a shooting. They found the homeowner, 43-year-old David Hunter, dead in the dining room and Robert Wrinkle Jr., also 43, fatally wounded outside.

A woman inside the house told police that she had dated Wrinkle in the past and he came over to see her. She did not want to see him.

Police say she called 911 after Hunter shot Wrinkle but before he took his own life. Police Cmdr. David Babcock said the men also knew each other and were talking through the door before the shooting.

STEPHENVILLE — Defense attorneys for a Lancaster man accused of killing former Navy SEAL Chris Kyle and another man in February 2013 rested their case Thursday afternoon.

Eddie Ray Routh, 27, is charged with capital murder in the shooting deaths of Kyle and his friend, Chad Littlefield, who took him to Rough Creek Lodge and Resort in hopes of helping him with post-traumatic stress disorder.

Routh, a former Marine corporal, confessed to killing the men but pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity. Defense attorneys have said that Routh was in a state of psychosis at the time of the killings. And a forensic psychiatrist testified Thursday that Routh suffers from schizophrenia.

He was exhibiting signs of psychosis in the weeks leading up to and on the day of the shooting deaths of Kyle and Littlefield, testified Dr. Mitchell H. Dunn, a forensic psychiatrist.

Dunn spent more than six hours interviewing Routh in April 2014 to determine his state of mind when he shot Littlefield and Kyle on Feb. 2, 2013. Routh had recently been released from the VA hospital after a psychotic episode.

Routh’s friends and families testified that his behavior in the weeks before the killings was increasingly erratic. He acted as if he believed that someone was going to hurt him and that the government was listening to him.

He described seeing neighbors and friends as turning into pig-human hybrids, Dunn testified. Routh also believed that two of his coworkers were cannibals and were going to harm him.

And on the day Kyle and Littlefield picked up Routh at his Lancaster home, he believed they were going to assassinate him.

“He thought he was going to die if he didn’t take care of business and kill them first,” Dunn said.

The victim has been identified as Lasalle Jones, 25, of Dallas, according to the medical examiner’s office.

Police identified the suspect as 56-year-old Michael McDonald, who now faces a murder charge. Investigators say the shooting followed a fight at McDonald’s house.

Police say the suspect was “upset because of the drama in his house” and shot into Jones’ car after the two men exchanged words, according to McDonald’s arrest warrant affidavit (posted below). Jones has just broken up a fight inside the home and was leaving with his girlfriend.

The girlfriend, who was shot in the leg, said Jones didn’t have a gun and did not threaten McDonald. It’s unclear how McDonald knew the victims; police did not say how they are related.

McDonald fled the scene but returned later with his brother and confessed to the shooting, police said. He is being held in the Dallas County Jail.

Dallas police are investigating a fatal shooting that took place in a Lower Greenville parking lot early Sunday morning.

Police records show that at 2:13 a.m. officers were dispatched to the OT Tavern at Greenville and Martel, where they found a man shot multiple times in the parking lot behind the bar. Paramedics pronounced him dead at the scene.

Dallas police spokesperson Senior Corporal Demarquis Black says that right now, it appears “that two separate groups were leaving the location when an altercation between the two groups began.” A man pulled out a gun and shot 26-year-old Orlando Pulido to death.

An off-duty Dallas police officer and a female acquaintance died in an apparent murder-suicide Saturday night at a Far Northeast Dallas apartment complex, Dallas police say.

Police responded to a shooting call about 6:13 p.m. at Lake Highlands Landing apartment complex in the 9700 block of Forest Lane. They found Larry Tuttle, a six-year veteran of the Dallas Police Department, and a woman dead from apparent gunshot wounds at his apartment.

Tuttle, 40, was an officer in the South Central Patrol Division.

Police say preliminary investigations indicate the woman shot Tuttle and then shot herself. A six-year-old child was in the apartment, but was found unharmed.

Police will release the woman’s name after they notify her family. They did not say how Tuttle and the woman knew one another.

The shooting happened at the Flats at Five Mile Creek apartments, near I-35E and Loop 12.

This item has been updated.

Staff writers Ehsan Azad and Claire Cardona report:

Dallas police are investigating a shooting that left one man dead after a confrontation with a tow truck driver early Thursday.

The shooting took place shortly after 3:30 a.m. at The Flats at Five Mile Creek, which is located in the 400 block of East Ledbetter Drive.

The driver had left his truck idling while he walked around to inspect cars for parking permit stickers. He heard the sound of the truck door open and saw 27-year-old Lance Lemons reversing the truck, said Dallas police Major Jeff Cotner.

Cotner said the driver then pulled out his gun and fired a shot through the driver’s side window, striking Lemons.

The driver was on the phone with a co-worker at the time of the shooting who notified dispatch. Dispatch called 911 and police arrived about 4:15 a.m. to find the wounded man still in the truck. Lemons was taken to Methodist Dallas Medical Center where he died.

The driver remained at the scene until police arrived. He was interviewed and released, Cotner said.

Daniel Robles, an assistant manager at the apartments, said the complex has been using the towing company for more than five years, and there have been no problems reported. Officials from United Tows were to go brief apartment managers later in the day.

“My understanding is that they do their job,” Robles said.

The apartment complex employs United Tows to tow any cars that are parked in spots reserved for residents.

“They will tow you if you are in the wrong spot” said Shawn Hopkins, who’s lived at The Flats for three years. “When I see them, they always seem to have a car.”

Lemons’ car was parked in visitor parking and would not have been towed by the driver, Cotner said.

It’s unclear why Lemons, who was unarmed, was at the complex. The case is being investigated as a homicide, but police are working to determine whether the driver, who had a CHL from Arizona, acted in lawful defense of his property when he shot Lemons.

Chris Kyle was shot and killed in February 2013 at a shooting range near Glen Rose.

Eddie Ray Routh is expected to plead not guilty by reason of insanity.

An Erath County judge will begin questioning potential jurors Thursday for the capital murder trial of the troubled veteran accused of killing American Sniper Chris Kyle and another man.

Worldwide publicity surrounding the blockbuster movie and the Feb. 2, 2013, killings at a shooting range near Glen Rose is expected to be front and center when the potential jurors are questioned about their ability to be fair and impartial in the case.

State District Judge Jason Cashon will handle the initial round of questioning, ruling out jurors with easy excuses such as health or child care issues, or disabilities. Defense attorneys and prosecutors will begin direct questioning of the remaining jury panel on Monday.

Former Marine Cpl. Eddie Ray Routh, 27, is charged with capital murder in the deaths of Kyle and Chad Littlefield. He is expected to plead not guilty by reason of insanity.

Prosecutors have ruled out the death penalty, but he would face automatic life in prison without parole if convicted.